Franklin Pierce
Franklin Pierce, fourteenth president of the United States, was born on November 23, 1804, in Hillsboro, New Hampshire. Like his predecessor James K. Polk, Pierce was a little-known figure retired from national politics when the Democratic Party summoned him to be its candidate for president.
The great objects of our pursuit as a people are best to be attained by peace, and are entirely consistent with the tranquility and interests of the rest of mankind.Inaugural Address, March 4, 1853–Franklin Pierce. U.S. Presidential Inaugurations: “I Do Solemnly Swear…” A Resource Guide.Manuscript Division

The son of a former governor of New Hampshire, Pierce was elected to the New Hampshire legislature at the age of twenty-five. He went on to represent New Hampshire in the U.S. House of Representatives (1833-37) and in the Senate (1837-1842). He resigned from the Senate a year before the end of his term, however, in deference to his wife, Jane, a chronically depressed and physically fragile woman who loathed her husband’s involvement in politics, particularly at the national level.
With the exception of a brief stint as a high-ranking officer in the Mexican War, Pierce spent the next decade practicing lawand serving as federal district attorney in Concord, New Hampshire. When told that the 1852 Democratic national convention had nominated her husband for president as a compromise candidate on its forty-ninth ballot, Jane Pierce “fainted dead away.” The Pierces’ young son, the only one still living of their three children, was killed in a gruesome railway accident two months before his father’s inauguration.

As president (1853-57), Pierce opposed antislavery legislation in the interests of promoting sectional harmony and economic prosperity. His administration paved the way for construction of a transcontinental railway and promoted American settlement of the Northwest. During his presidency, the United States acquired 30,000 square miles of territory from Mexico through the Gadsden Purchase. Pierce’s accomplishments were overshadowed by his support for the controversial Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854), which replaced the Missouri Compromise of 1820 with permission for each new state to decide on the basis of popular sovereignty whether or not it would allow slavery. One result was the outbreak of violent conflict in the territory that came to be known as “Bleeding Kansas.”
A hard-working but generally weak chief executive, Pierce was blamed for heightening sectional tensions within the Democratic Party and for the concomitant rise of the new Republican Party. He failed to win the Democratic nomination for reelection in 1856. Fellow Democrat James Buchanan succeeded him in the White House, and Pierce entered an unhappy retirement in which his genial temperament was increasingly overtaken by alcoholism. His wife died in 1863, his hostility to the Lincoln administration isolated him during the Civil War, and he himself died a notably lonely man on October 8, 1869.

Learn More
- For more photographs of the Pierce homes in Hillsboro and Concord, New Hampshire, search on Pierce in Gottscho-Schleisner Collection .
- View selected items from the Library’s collection of Franklin Pierce Papers. The online presentation includes a Timeline of key events in Franklin Pierce’s life.
- Learn more about the political climate of Pierce’s presidency and the historical context of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in “Conflict of Abolition and Slavery,” part of the online exhibition The African-American Mosaic.
- Browse Prairie Settlement: Nebraska Photographs and Family Letters, 1862-1912 to see around 3,000 glass plate negatives, and read a similar number of family letters recording and discussing the process of settlement in Nebraska. Read the Special Presentation– The Oblinger Family and Their Letters to reveal the story of the land and its settlement through the struggles of this family to settle and prosper on a farm of their own. And view, for example, a home in Leroy Leep, or Buffalo County, or Nebraska’s Old Carns Bridge Post Office.
- Read Chief Justice Roger Taney’s letter to Caleb Cushing for a contemporary account of public attitudes in a pivotal 1857 Supreme Court case concerning slavery. Cushing served as attorney general during the Pierce administration. This document is featured in the collection Words and Deeds in American History: Selected Documents Celebrating the Manuscript Division’s First 100 Years.
- Learn about elections and U.S. presidents. Select Elections from the presentations & activities section of the Teachers Page for an overview and additional resources on these topics. Also view the Presidential Elections Resource Guidesto find more information on the Library’s web site.
The Battle of Chattanooga
On November 23, 1863, the Battle of Chattanooga began. Over the next three days, Union forces drove Confederate troops away from Chattanooga, Tennessee, into Georgia, setting the stage for Union General William T. Sherman’s triumphant march to the sea.

The Battle of Chattanooga was one of the most dramatic turnabouts in American military history. Northern forces captured the steamboat and railhead center shortly after their September defeat at Chickamauga. In the early fall of 1863, Rebel forces moved into the mountains and bluffs overlooking Chattanooga, preventing the Union Army’s escape.
Commanding posts at Lookout Mountain, almost 2,000 feet above the Tennessee River Valley, Confederates laid siege to Chattanooga, firing down on river and rail traffic entering the village from Union-controlled western Tennessee. From Missionary Ridge, east of Chattanooga, they blocked the only rail line to the northeast and Virginia. Stymied by the Confederate blockade, U.S. troops, under command of Major General William S. Rosecrans, seemed destined to fall.
Their fate changed in mid-October. On October 19, General Ulysses S. Grant replaced the beleaguered Rosecrans with Major General George Thomas. Shortly thereafter, Major General Joseph Hooker moved into the area with 20,000 Union forces. Grant followed on October 22. Within days, Union engineers constructed a pontoon bridge west of town and were directing supplies into Chattanooga. In mid-November, General Sherman arrived with 17,000 more men. The Union Army was ready to fight.

On November 23, Thomas’ troops overtook Confederates occupying Orchard Knob between Chattanooga and Missionary Ridge. The next day, in what is known as the “battle above the Clouds,” Hooker drove his men on to victory at Lookout Mountain. On November 25, the last day of battle, the Union Army crushed the Rebel line at Missionary Ridge, sending the Confederates further south toward their final defeat.
Learn More
- Search across the pictorial collections on Lookout Mountain to find more photographs of this historic battle site, including a view of Craven House, where some of the battle’s most brutal fighting took place.
- View additional Civil War photographs. Browse the subject index of Civil War Glass Negatives and Related Prints. The collection’s timeline, charts the war from the South’s secession in 1861 to the surrender of Confederate troops in April and May 1865.
- Locate other Civil War features by searching Today in History on the term Civil War. Read, for example, about other Civil War battles, including the First Battle of Bull Run, the Second Battle of Manassas, and the three day Battle of Gettysburg.
- Browse Civil War Maps by subject, place, creator, or title for views of more than 2,600 Civil War maps and charts as well as atlases and sketchbooks.
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